In many professions, like acting, a person creates a legal alias in order to put some distance between her family and friends and her professional activity. In the cam girl world there is a similar need, but there is an even bigger requirement for personal safety. Many cam girls use their online identity to shield their location, to protect them from stalkers and overzealous fans. But what about creating an altered *legal* identity as well, to provide an extra layer of protection?
My first reading of the laws on these issues is that creating a legal alias is actually pretty difficult and - for cam girl work - may not even be useful. In general it looks like many states in the US strongly discourage any form of legal alias. To the extent that they support a legal alias at all, you have to go through all kinds of legal process that is put into the public record to establish a clear public record linking your new alias to your original real identity. That defeats the whole point of creating the alias. You cannot use it to shield identity, and in fact it would have the opposite effect of exposing your real identity because of the public records requirement.
I have some ideas on how you might get around this, in part. Could you create a corporation or LLC in a state - like Nevada - that does not require disclosure of the owners? Make the name of that legal business entity the same as your online identity. Have all payments from cam sites go to that legal entity.
The advantage of the above would be multiple:
* When you need to file legal claims - like DMCA takedown that is for content you own instead of some third party ownership like a webcam site - you can use the legal entity as the owner.
* It lowers your chance of audit by IRS, since IRS loves to audit individuals doing personal service work and filing as sole proprietors. To contrast, the audit rates on small income (<$1M) corporations is low.
* All packages and correspondence could be done to the legal entity, possibly using a mail forwarder in Nevada, so you would never need to expose your actual state of residence or real address.
How do others handle these issues?
My first reading of the laws on these issues is that creating a legal alias is actually pretty difficult and - for cam girl work - may not even be useful. In general it looks like many states in the US strongly discourage any form of legal alias. To the extent that they support a legal alias at all, you have to go through all kinds of legal process that is put into the public record to establish a clear public record linking your new alias to your original real identity. That defeats the whole point of creating the alias. You cannot use it to shield identity, and in fact it would have the opposite effect of exposing your real identity because of the public records requirement.
I have some ideas on how you might get around this, in part. Could you create a corporation or LLC in a state - like Nevada - that does not require disclosure of the owners? Make the name of that legal business entity the same as your online identity. Have all payments from cam sites go to that legal entity.
The advantage of the above would be multiple:
* When you need to file legal claims - like DMCA takedown that is for content you own instead of some third party ownership like a webcam site - you can use the legal entity as the owner.
* It lowers your chance of audit by IRS, since IRS loves to audit individuals doing personal service work and filing as sole proprietors. To contrast, the audit rates on small income (<$1M) corporations is low.
* All packages and correspondence could be done to the legal entity, possibly using a mail forwarder in Nevada, so you would never need to expose your actual state of residence or real address.
How do others handle these issues?